Tag Archives: prototyping

word and pictures by Brian Solis

There are groups of people around the country that inspire me. They’re changing the tech world and they’re bringing us along for the ride. It’s a humanizing reminder that we actually don’t know everything and that the only way to continue to keep up with the rapid-fire evolution of the new Web is to focus on building relationships.

People count for everything and that’s why we’re collectively defining the social economy.

Enter the TechSet, the people who are actively defining the new Web landscape and contributing to the lucrative and industry-defining social economy along the way.

The Techset is you.

Stephanie Agresta and I organized The Techset to celebrate you and your contributions to the new web and the relationships and new trails we blaze together.

On the afternoon of June 7th, we brought the rooftop parties from the West Coast to the Right Coast while connecting with NY-based entrepreneurs and those in town for InternetWeek. Special guests from the blogosphere as well as VCs, developers, and founders took over the rooftop of the stylish Hotel Gansevoort in the chic part of NY made popular by the Sex and the City franchise.

I was humbled.

New York is a thriving tech community rich with innovation, brilliance, and a refreshing spirit of entrepreneurialism. It’s contributing to the evolution of a more meaningful and productive Web. We were lucky to be part of it for a day.

Thank you to everyone who made the TechSet event so special.

Stephanie Agresta

Jane Quigley

Rana Sobhany

Joel Dreyfuss of Red Herring

Leora Zellman

Loren Feldman and Michelle

Charles Forman of Iminlikewithyou.com

Julia Allison

Aubrey Sabala of Digg and Maya Baratz of flickr

Andrew Baron of Rocketboom and Sarah Austin

Caroline McCarthy of CNET

Gaia Borgias Brown

Hugh MacLeod

Meghan Asha, Sarah Austin, David Karp of Tumblr

Esther Dyson (left)

Stephanie Frasco (left)

Charles Hope of Blip.tv and Dan Patterson of talk Radio News Service

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Rosenbaum of Magnify.net

Stephanie Agresta, Aubrey Sabala, Brian Solis, Maya Baratz

Laura Fitton aka Pistachio

The after party…

Aubrey Sabala and Pete Cashmore

Pete “Cash”more

Brett Petersel

Leora Zellman

New York After Hours

Visit flickr for more pictures from the TechSet event and the after party.

Connect with me on Twitter, Jaiku, LinkedIn, Pownce, Plaxo, FriendFeed, Tumblr, or Facebook.

words and pictures by Brian Solis

New York’s Internet Week just raised the bar and set the new standard for up-and-coming regional Web economies.

During the week, New York was host to several events and parties, and I was lucky enough to attend a few of them.

Mashable’s Exhibit Hall at Touch on Friday night was representative of the excitement and enthusiasm that is driving the social economy in New York and why it’s only getting started.

The people, the technology, and the relationships…it’s pretty powerful and compelling.

The pictures vividly captured the spirit, hope, and excitement and will help tell the rest of the story.

Obama Girl – Amber Lee Ettinger

Stephanie Agresta and Adam Ostrow

Steve Rosenbaum of Magnify.net

Yan Nuriyev of Imintown.com

Sarah Austin

Andrew Baron of Rocketboom

Allen Stern of Center Networks

Adam Ostrow

Pete Cashmore

Rana June and

Oz Sultan, Brett Petersel, Alana Taylor, & Bill Cammack

Amanda Mooney

Obama Girl and Brian Solis

The After Party…

Paul Lewis of MTV, Rockstar Alana Taylor and Mike Lewis

Chris Munns of Meetup.com

The Coffee Shop

See my albums on flickr for more pictures from the Mashable event and the after party.

Connect with me on Twitter, Jaiku, LinkedIn, Pownce, Plaxo, FriendFeed, Tumblr, or Facebook.

by Jackie Peters

I just got back from the Under the Radar Social Media and Entertainment conference on the Microsoft campus in Mountain View, CA. The conference series has been put on by DealMakerMedia since 2005.

Thirty six startups were given an opportunity to present their companies to a panel of judges and an audience of peers, potential investors and companies interested in acquisitions.

DealMaker did an amazing job putting the conference together. There was a quality group of attendees, judges that ranged from Charlene Li to Kara Swisher to Robert Scoble. For a full list of presenting companies and judges see the Under the Radar blog.

There seemed to be basically three kinds of companies at Under the Radar, and in the social space in general; ones that add to the noise, ones that insert themselves into the noise, and those that are attempting to consolidate and quiet the noise.

I have lately been thinking of the social web in terms of our physical universe.

Let’s equate the social web, or Web 2.0, with the big bang. Suddenly the web went from being fairly dormant to exploding out into space. The “socialverse” has been expanding rapidly ever since.

The proliferation of content and communication is immense. In my vision of the future of the social web, I don’t see all of these sites, all of this chatter going away, just being accessed in different ways, more to come on that later.

There will still be a need for things like personal blogs, company blogs, niche social networks and various social tools, especially if they fill a need for a particular audience.

Enter sites like Nesting. Nesting solves problems for busy families; it includes social networking and organizational tools for parents and organizations. Parents can do everything from schedule a play date to set up SMS reminders for dentists appointments to order prints of their favorite family photos right from Nesting.com.

Then you have the companies who are doing their best to embed themselves in what exists all ready. Let’s look at them as matter. They exist all over the place and follow the tide of the expansion and contraction of the socialverse. A great example of a company who is doing this well is MyTopia and their Real-time Universal Gaming System (RUGS.)

Galia Ben-Artzi of Mytopia by Brian Solis

It allows users, developers and advertisers to participate with existing communities of people on major social networks like Facebook, Bebo, MySpace and hi5, with support for additional sites in the works. For instance, MyTopians on Bebo can play games with other MyTopians on Facebook in realtime. RUGS, the platform behind MyTopia, allows developers to automatically and instantly deploy content across the entire RUGS network.

Galia Ben-Artzi, co-founder of MyTopia eloquently summed it up when she said “MyTopians play together in harmony across all social networks with gaming as their common language.”

Some physicists believe that the universe at some point will stretch to it’s max and like so many rubber bands everything will once again contract until it once again reaches Planck density, resulting in a “big crunch.” That, in fact, the universe does this in a cyclical manner and always has and always will.

With many experiencing “social media fatigue” and new social networks and tools being released everyday it seems like a socialverse big crunch is imminent. But how will this look?

The problem I see at the moment is that too many companies are attempting to be aggregators. Everyone wants to be that one place where we all go to check, update and maintain our networks. They are just adding to the clutter.

What’s next?

Aggregators to aggregate the aggregators?

Some companies do seem to be adding real value and are focusing on solving the overload problem in unique and inventive ways. One such company that presented at Under the Radar was ffwd.

Patrick Koppula, CEO, formerly of iLike set the stage by supplying us with an overview of his vision of the future of television and online video. Patrick believes that in the future, television and online video will merge. The set top box will no longer be 500 channels but instead will be a sea of 500,000 sources of video. I am inclined to agree. Certainly at the moment we are already there with the internet. Ffwd uses semantics, behavioral targeting and socialization to quiet the chatter and deliver video to users that they are likely to enjoy and appreciate in the form of customized channels, making watching video online more like channel surfing. The technology works across multiple screens, with current support for the web, the Wii and mobile devices.

It’s an interesting space-time! I love watching the socialverse unfold, expand and collapse back in on itself, most likely a pattern that will sustain itself in a cyclical manner, with exciting new technologies and platforms emerging in each incarnation. Congrats also to the winners at Under the Radar, to see a full list click here.

For more pictures, visit Brian Solis’ albums on flickr here and here.

Bub.blicio.us had the pleasure of attending the inaugural Startup2Startup dinner hosted by Dave McClure.

Geeks, entrepreneurs and investors all gathered to listen to Mike Cassidy give his speech “Speed: The Ultimate Startup Weapon.” Ted Rheingold, founder of Catster and Dogster, was one such attendee and we pulled him aside to chat about his sites and what he hoped to get out of the event.

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Bub.blicio.us caught up with involver a few weeks ago at Stirr’s DealHacks event in Palo Alto to get a sneak peek and talk with CEO Rahim Fazal.

involver enables people to make their videos more engaging, social and viral by providing a platform to create, distribute, track and measure online video campaigns. The company is in stealth mode and is launching its private beta program soon, but has already had some early success with recent campaigns during its alpha stage.

One such campaign helped filmmaker Shamir Allibhai promote his documentary and raise awareness on his film’s message of tolerance, resulting in 30,000 views and generated 4,000 pledges to buy the DVD of the film.

You can sign up for early access to the platform here.

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